The New Orleans Saints
are a professional American football team based in New Orleans, Louisiana. The Saints play in the South Division of the National Football Conference (NFC) in the National Football League (NFL).
The Saints were founded in 1967, as an expansion team. They went more than a decade before they managed to finish a season with a .500 record and two decades before having a winning season. The team's first successful years were from 1987–1992, when the team made the playoffs four times and had winning records in the non-playoff seasons. In the 2000 season, the Saints defeated the then-defending Super Bowl champion St. Louis Rams for the team's first playoff win.
The Saints' home stadium is the Louisiana Superdome. The team has played its home games in the "dome" since 1975. [1] However, due to damage caused by Hurricane Katrina to the New Orleans area, the Saints' 2005 home opener was played at Giants Stadium against the New York Giants. The remainder of their 2005 home games were split between the Alamodome in San Antonio, Texas, and LSU's Tiger Stadium in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. After a $185 million renovation of the historic stadium, the team returned to the Superdome for the 2006 season. The team played its 2006 home opener in front of a sold-out crowd and national television audience on September 25, 2006, defeating its NFC South rival, the Atlanta Falcons by a score of 23–3. The victory received a 2007 ESPY award for "Best Moment in Sports."
New Orleans is one of five NFL teams that have yet to play in a Super Bowl. The club reached the NFC Championship Game in 2006, which they lost to the Chicago Bears 39-14.
The Saints will conduct summer training camp at their practice facility in Metairie, Louisiana.
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NEW ORLEANS SAINTS TICKETS
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History
Early history
For more information, see History of the New Orleans Saints
The brainchild of local sports entrepreneur
David Dixon, who also founded the
Louisiana Superdome and
USFL, the Saints were actually secretly born in a backroom deal brought about by Congressman
Hale Boggs and NFL Commissioner
Pete Rozelle. The NFL needed congressional approval of the proposed
AFL-NFL merger. To seal the deal, Rozelle arrived in New Orleans within a week, and announced on, coincidentally,
All Saints' Day -- November 1, 1966—that the NFL officially had awarded the city of New Orleans an NFL franchise; Boggs' Congressional committee in turn quickly approved the NFL merger. The team was named for the world-famous jazz anthem, "
When the Saints Go Marching In". John W. Mecom, Jr., a young oilman from Houston, became the team's first majority stockholder. The team's colors, black and gold, symbolized both Mecom's and New Orleans' strong ties to the oil ("black gold") industry. Trumpeter
Al Hirt was part owner of the team, and his rendition of "When the Saints Go Marching In" was made the official fight song.
That first season started with a 94 yard opening kickoff return for a touchdown by
John Gilliam, but the Saints lost that game 27–13 to the
Los Angeles Rams at
Tulane Stadium. Their first season record was 3–11, which set an NFL record for most wins by an expansion team. However, they could not manage to finish as high as second in their division until 1979. That 1979 team and the 1983 team were the only ones to even finish at .500 until 1987.
One of the franchise's shining moments came on November 8, 1970, when
Tom Dempsey kicked an NFL record-breaking 63-yard field goal to defeat the
Detroit Lions by a score of 19-17 in the final seconds of the game. This record, although equaled 29 years later by
Jason Elam of the
Denver Broncos, has yet to be broken.
In 1980, the Saints lost their first 14 games, prompting local media personality
Bernard "Buddy D" Diliberto to advise Saints supporters to wear paper bags over their heads at the team's home games; many bags rendered the club's name as the "'
Aints" rather than the "Saints." The practice of wearing a bag over one's head then spread rapidly, first to fans of other poorly-performing teams within the NFL, and ultimately to those of other American team sports, and has become a firmly-established custom throughout the
United States.
After the end of the 1996 season, ironically as Diliberto had suggested before Mora's resignation, former
Chicago Bears coach
Mike Ditka was hired to replace Mora. Although this initially generated a lot of excitement among Saints fans, Ditka's tenure ended up being a failure. The Saints went 6-10 in their first two seasons under Ditka (1997 and 1998). During the 1999
NFL Draft, Ditka traded all of his picks for that season, as well as the first-round and third-round picks for the following season, to the
Washington Redskins in order to draft
University of Texas Heisman Trophy running back
Ricky Williams in the first round. Ditka and Williams had a mock wedding picture taken to commemorate the occasion. However, Ditka, most of his coaching staff, and general manager
Bill Kuharich were fired at the end of the 1999 season due to the club's 3-13 record.
Jim Haslett held the post from 2000 to 2005. In his first year, he took the team to the playoffs but lost to the
Minnesota Vikings a week after beating the
St. Louis Rams for the team's first ever playoff win. After winning the 2000 NFL Executive of the Year Award, General Manager
Randy Mueller was fired between the 2001 and 2002 seasons without explanation by Benson. The Saints failed to make the playoffs in 2001 and 2002, although in the latter year they had the distinction of beating the eventual
Super Bowl XXXVII champion
Tampa Bay Buccaneers in both of their regular season meetings, only the second team to do so in NFL history (the 1995 Washington Redskins did so against the to be World Champion Dallas Cowboys). In 2003 the Saints again missed the playoffs after finishing 8-8. The 2004 season started poorly for the Saints, as they went 2-4 through their first six games and 4-8 through their first twelve games. At that point Haslett's job appeared to be in jeopardy; however, he managed to win the three straight games leading up to the season finale, leaving the Saints in playoff contention in the final week of the season. In week 17, the Saints defeated division rivals
Carolina; however, the Saints needed other results to break their way and when the St. Louis Rams beat the
New York Jets the Saints were eliminated despite having beaten the Rams, who finished with the same record. The Rams, Saints, and Vikings all were 8-8, with the Rams having a 7-5 conference record, Saints 6-6, and the Vikings 5-7, the Rams made the playoffs due to having the best conference record, and then they took the Vikings because of the head to head. Haslett was fired after the 2005 season, in which the Saints finished 3-13 and did not play one regular season contest in New Orleans due to Hurricane Katrina. On January 17, 2006, the Saints hired
Sean Payton as their new head coach.
On December 17, 2006, the Saints clinched their third division title and their first
NFC South title in franchise history. For the first time in Saints' history, they clinched their
NFC South title on their home field.
Sean Payton became the second consecutive Saints coach to win a division title in his first season. After a loss by the
Dallas Cowboys to the
Philadelphia Eagles on Christmas Day 2006, the Saints clinched a first-round playoff bye for the first time in franchise history.
Effect of Hurricane Katrina
2006: Homecoming and postseason
On
March 23, the Saints announced that the team's two 2006 preseason games were to be played at
Shreveport, Louisiana and
Jackson, Mississippi.
On April 6 the Saints released their 2006 schedule, with all home games scheduled to be played at the Superdome. The home opener against the
Atlanta Falcons was moved to
September 25 and was shown on
ESPN's
Monday Night Football.
On September 19, Saints owner
Tom Benson announced that the team had sold out the
Louisiana Superdome for the entire season with season tickets alone (70,001 seats), a first in franchise history.
The September 25, 2006 home opener, the first home game in
New Orleans after
Hurricane Katrina, was won by the Saints 23-3 against the
Atlanta Falcons, who were undefeated in the 2006 season at that time. The attendance for the game was a sellout crowd of 70,003. Meanwhile, the broadcast of the game was
ESPN's highest-ever rated program to date, with an 11.8 rating, and viewership by 10,850,000 homes. It was the most-watched program for the night, broadcast or cable, and was the second-highest rated cable program of all time.
U2 and
Green Day performed "
Wake Me Up When September Ends" and "
The Saints Are Coming" before the game.
After the first-round bye, the Saints beat the
Philadelphia Eagles 27-24 in the Superdome in the 2006 Divisional Playoffs. No team had ever had such a poor record in the prior year (3-13) and then went on to a league or conference championship game since the
1999 St. Louis Rams who advanced to win their first
Super Bowl after also being 3-13 the season before. Since the Saints' only other playoff win was in the wild card round, this is the farthest the Saints have ever advanced. The victory was only the second playoff win in team history.
The season ended on January 21, 2007 when the Saints lost 39–14 to the
Chicago Bears in the
NFC Championship game.
2007-present
The Saints announced that for the second year in a row, the
Louisiana Superdome had sold out every ticket for the season.
[2] Additionally, all luxury boxes had been sold out for the season. Both of these statistics are particularly surprising given that the city-proper has about 300,000 people or 150,000 fewer people than July 2005 population data (though the metro area still accounts for 1.2 million people)..
The first game of the season was against the defending
Super Bowl XLI champion
Indianapolis Colts. The Saints lost this game, 41–10, and lost their next three games. In one of these three games, against the
Tennessee Titans, the Saints lost running back
Deuce McAllister for the season with his second career (second time in three seasons)
ACL tear. After winning their first game, against the
Seattle Seahawks, two weeks later, the team went on a four-game winning streak to bring their record to an even 4–4. After reaching 7–7, the Saints lost their final two games to finish 7–9.
The Saints made a move with the
Super Bowl XLII champion
New York Giants. They acquired
Jeremy Shockey from them for second and fifth round draft picks in the
2009 NFL Draft. They also acquired linebacker
Jonathan Vilma from the
New York Jets, in exchange for a conditional 2009 4th round draft pick. In the 2009 NFL entry draft the Saints selected Malcolm Jenkins with the 14th overall pick. Jenkins is a CB from Ohio state university.
Logos and uniforms
Except for minor modifications, the Saints' logo and uniforms have basically remained the same since the club debuted in 1967. The team's logo is a
fleur-de-lis, while its uniform design consists of gold helmets, gold pants, and either black or white jerseys. Minor changes to the uniform stripes and trim have been made throughout the years. The team wore black helmets during the 1969 preseason, but NFL commissioner
Pete Rozelle barred the Saints from using the helmets during the regular season, since owner
John Mecom, Jr. did not notify the league office of the change.
The Saints predominantly wore white at home when the club played at
Tulane Stadium from 1967 through 1974 (except in 1969 and 1970), forcing opponents to wear dark colors in the
subtropical climate of New Orleans. When the surface at Tulane Stadium switched from natural grass to
AstroTurf in 1971, field temperatures became hotter still. In
Archie Manning's first game, in the 1971 season opener against the
Los Angeles Rams, temperatures on the field reached as high as 130 degrees. The heavily favored Rams wilted in the stifling heat, and the Saints claimed their first-ever victory over their NFC West rivals, 24-20, on Manning's 1-yard quarterback sneak on the last play of the game.
The Saints switched to white pants in 1975, coinciding with the team's move from Tulane Stadium to the Superdome. One year later, they started to wear black pants with their white jerseys, a move influenced by coach Hank Stram, who introduced red pants to the
Kansas City Chiefs' uniforms in 1968. In an October 3, 1976 home game against the
Houston Oilers, Hank Stram used the Saints' road uniforms, the white jerseys and black pants. The Saints lost that game 31–26. During the 1981–82 seasons (
Bum Phillips' first two seasons as coach), the team wore white jerseys with black pants at home, but reverted back to the black jerseys and white pants for 1983. They reverted back to wearing gold pants with both their black and white jerseys in 1986 under new coach
Jim E. Mora. From 1986 through 1995, the sleeves of the jerseys and sides of the pants featured a logo with a fleur-de-lis inside an outline of the state of
Louisiana. The logo replaced the striping pattern that had been on the uniforms since the team's inception; save for color variations, the striping pattern was similar to that used by the
Washington Redskins (until 1979),
Green Bay Packers (until 1997), and
Cleveland Browns (still in use s of {{MONTHNAME 2007
[]), which is likely why the change was made. That logo was removed in 1996 and replaced with a fleur-de-lis on both the sleeves and sides of the pants.
From 1996 through 1998, the Saints returned to gold numbers on both the white and black jerseys, but complaints about the numbers on the white jerseys being too difficult to read forced the numbers on the white jerseys to be changed to black in 1999. The Saints wore black pants with a wide gold stripe with their white jerseys in 1999, but following a 3-13 season and the dismissal of coach
Mike Ditka, the black pants were mothballed by new coach
Jim Haslett.
In 2000, the Saints won their first playoff game as they hosted the St. Louis Rams and after having a better road record than home record, they wore their white jerseys, helping them get a 31-28 win over the defending champion Rams. The defining play of the game came with the Saints clinging to a three-point lead with minutes to play. The Saints punted to the Rams'
Az-Zahir Hakim (who would play one season for the Saints in 2005), who fumbled the punt deep in Rams' territory.
Brian Milne recovered for the Saints, who then ran out the clock to preserve the victory.
In 2001, they wore their white jerseys in the first six home games. During that same year, they primarily wore black pants with both their white and black jerseys. They became the first NFL team to wear all-black uniforms in a week 5 road game against the
Carolina Panthers, and again in weeks 16 and 17 in home games against the
Washington Redskins and
San Francisco 49ers. (It is notable that the all-black outfit made a comeback on December 3, 2006 in a 34-10 victory over the 49ers. The team used it the week after against the
Dallas Cowboys on December 10, 2006 in a 42-17 victory.)
In 2002, the Saints wore black pants with their white jerseys (except for the final road game, a 20-13 loss in
Cincinnati when they went back to the gold pants), and gold pants with their black jerseys, a gold alternate jersey, and a 1967-style throwback uniform. But one season later, they stopped using the alternates and again reverted back to wearing gold pants with both their black and white jerseys.
The team introduced a gold alternate jersey (worn with the black pants) during a December 15, 2002 game versus the
Minnesota Vikings, a 32-31 loss, but have never worn them since then. Because of the metallic gold's bright color, the gold jerseys were considered the "light" jersey in the game, so the Vikings wore their purple home jerseys as the "dark" colored team. One team must wear "dark" and one team must wear "light", the only exception being if both teams are wearing throwback uniforms, such as Thanksgiving Classic games. Today only the
New England Patriots have a "light" jersey (their alternate, a bright metallic silver) that isn't white in which the other team would wear their colored, or "dark" jerseys against them since the
third jersey rule was implemented in the NFL in 2002.
The Saints also introduced a 1967-style
throwback uniform in a 23-20 win in week 13 (December 1) against the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers. This also was never worn again but re-introduction of the jerseys in stores suggests they may make a comeback as the Saints' alternate uniform.
In 2006, to honor their return to Louisiana, the Saints wore a patch on their uniforms with an outline of the State of Louisiana with a fleur-de-lis superimposed, similar to the logo from the 1980s.
The Saints originally planned to wear white jerseys at home for the 2006 season, but during the season, the players voted to wear the black jerseys at home after the second home game. Since the team had informed the NFL office that they planned to wear white jerseys at home, each of the Saints' remaining home opponents would have to agree to New Orleans' request. The
Cincinnati Bengals did not agree to the switch, forcing the Saints to wear white jerseys for that game.
Starting in week 13 of the 2006 season, the Saints wore white jerseys with black pants and in a Week 16 game in The Meadowlands against the
New York Giants (a 30-7 Saints win), the Saints wore the black pants with their road white jerseys. The Saints later stuck with that combo in the NFL Champhionship in Chicago.
The Saints wore white jerseys for their first four home games of 2008, but chose to wear the all-black combination for the October 26 game at
Wembley Stadium in
London vs. the
San Diego Chargers, in which New Orleans was the designated home team. The Saints have since worn their all-black combo for all home games since returning from London.
Statistics
Season-by-season records
Record vs. Opponents
(As of Week 17 of the
2008 NFL season. Includes postseason records.)
Note:
W = Wins, L = Losses, T = Ties''
Team
| W
| L
| T
| Percent
| Last Result
| Last Date
| Last Locale
| Postseason
|
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
| 20
| 14
| 0
| .588
| L 23-20
| November 30, 2008
| Tampa
|
|
Dallas Cowboys
| 15
| 13
| 0
| .525
| W 42-17
| December 10, 2006
| Irving
|
|
Detroit Lions
| 9
| 9
| 1
| .500
| W 42-7
| December 21, 2008
| Detroit
|
|
Los Angeles/Oakland Raiders
| 5
| 5
| 1
| .500
| W 34-3
| October 12, 2008
| New Orleans
|
|
New York Jets
| 5
| 5
| 0
| .500
| W 21-19
| November 27, 2005
| East Rutherford
|
|
Baltimore/Indianapolis Colts
| 5
| 5
| 0
| .500
| L 41-10
| September 6, 2007
| Indianapolis
|
|
Seattle Seahawks
| 5
| 5
| 0
| .500
| W 28-17
| October 14, 2007
| Seattle
|
|
Buffalo Bills
| 4
| 4
| 0
| .500
| W 19-7
| October 2, 2005
| *San Antonio
|
|
Jacksonville Jaguars
| 2
| 2
| 0
| .500
| W 41-24
| November 4, 2007
| New Orleans
|
|
Houston Texans
| 1
| 1
| 0
| .500
| L 23-10
| November 18, 2007
| Houston
|
|
St. Louis/Phoenix/Arizona Cardinals
| 12
| 13
| 0
| .480
| W 31-24
| December 16, 2007
| New Orleans
|
|
Pittsburgh Steelers
| 6
| 7
| 0
| .462
| L 38-31
| November 12, 2006
| Pittsburgh
|
|
Cincinnati Bengals
| 5
| 6
| 0
| .455
| L 31-16
| November 19, 2006
| New Orleans
|
|
Los Angeles/St. Louis Rams
| 30
| 38
| 0
| .441
| L 37-29
| November 11, 2007
| New Orleans
| 1-0 postseason
|
Atlanta Falcons
| 35
| 45
| 0
| .437
| W 29-25
| December 7, 2008
| New Orleans
| 0-1 postseason
|
Carolina Panthers
| 12
| 16
| 0
| .429
| L 33-31
| December 28, 2008
| New Orleans
|
|
Chicago Bears
| 11
| 15
| 0
| .423
| L 27-24
| December 11, 2008
| Chicago
| 0-2 postseason
|
New York Giants
| 10
| 14
| 0
| .417
| W 30-7
| December 24, 2006
| East Rutherford
|
|
Philadelphia Eagles
| 10
| 16
| 0
| .385
| L 38-23
| December 23, 2007
| New Orleans
| 1-1 postseason
|
Houston Oilers/Tennessee Titans
| 4
| 7
| 1
| .375
| L 31-14
| September 24, 2007
| New Orleans
|
|
Kansas City Chiefs
| 15
| 18
| 0
| .364
| W 30-20
| November 10, 2008
| Kansas City
|
|
San Francisco 49ers
| 23
| 45
| 2
| .343
| W 31-17
| September 28, 2008
| New Orleans
|
|
Green Bay Packers
| 7
| 14
| 0
| .333
| W 51-29
| November 24, 2008
| New Orleans
|
|
Miami Dolphins
| 3
| 6
| 0
| .333
| L 21-6
| October 30, 2005
| *Baton Rouge
|
|
Washington Redskins
| 7
| 15
| 0
| .318
| L 29-24
| September 14, 2008
| Landover
|
|
San Diego Chargers
| 3
| 7
| 0
| .300
| W 37-32
| October 26, 2008
| **London, England
|
|
New England Patriots
| 3
| 8
| 0
| .273
| L 24-17
| November 20, 2005
| Foxboro
|
|
Minnesota Vikings
| 7
| 20
| 0
| .259
| L 30-27
| October 6, 2008
| New Orleans
| 0-2 postseason
|
Cleveland Browns
| 4
| 11
| 0
| .267
| W 19-14
| September 10, 2006
| Cleveland
|
|
Baltimore Ravens
| 1
| 3
| 0
| .250
| L 35-22
| October 29, 2006
| New Orleans
|
|
Denver Broncos
| 2
| 7
| 0
| .222
| L 34-32
| September 21, 2008
| Denver
|
|
Total
| 264
| 426
| 5
| .380
|
|
|
| 2-6 .250
|
* - Saints home game, relocated due to
Hurricane Katrina
** - the Saints were designated the home team for this game
Single-Game Records
- Passing Yards:
510 Drew Brees (November 19, 2006 vs Cincinnati Bengals)
- Passing Touchdowns:
6 Billy Kilmer (November 2, 1969 at St. Louis Cardinals)
- Rushing Yards:
206 George Rogers (September 4, 1983 vs St. Louis Cardinals)
- Rushing Touchdowns:
3 multiple times, last Reggie Bush (December 3, 2006 vs San Francisco 49ers)
- Receiving Catches:
14 Tony Galbreath (September 10, 1978 at Green Bay Packers)
- Receiving Yards:
205 Wes Chandler (September 2, 1979 vs Atlanta Falcons)
- Receiving Touchdowns:
4 Joe Horn (December 14, 2003 vs New York Giants)
- Punt Return Yards:
: 176 Reggie Bush (October 6, 2008 vs Minnesota Vikings)
- Pass Interceptions, Game:
3 many times, last Sammy Knight (September 9, 2001 at Buffalo Bills)
- Field Goals, Game:
6 Tom Dempsey (November 16, 1969 at New York Giants)
- Total Touchdowns, Game
: 4 two times, last Reggie Bush (December 3, 2006 vs San Francisco 49ers)
- Points, Game
: 51 three times, last November 24, 2008 vs Green Bay Packers
- Margin Of Victory
: 42-0, November 20, 1988 vs Denver Broncos
Single-season records
- Passing Attempts
: 652 Drew Brees (2007)
- Passing Completions
: 440 Drew Brees (2007) - NFL Record
- Passing Yards
: 5,069 Drew Brees (2008) - only the 2nd QB in NFL history to have 5000+ passing yards in a season
- Passing Touchdowns
: 34 Drew Brees (2008)
- Passing Interceptions
: 22 Aaron Brooks (2001)
- Passing Rating
: 96.2 Drew Brees (2006, 2008)
- Rushing Attempts
: 378 George Rogers (1981)
- Rushing Yards
: 1,674 George Rogers (1981)
- Rushing Touchdowns
: 13 George Rogers (1981), Dalton Hilliard (1989), and Deuce McAllister (2002)
- Receiving Catches
: 98 Marques Colston (2007)
- Receiving Yards
: 1,399 Joe Horn (2004)
- Receiving Touchdowns
: 11 Joe Horn (2004), Marques Colston (2007)
- Quarterback Sacks
: 17 Pat Swilling (1991) and La'Roi Glover (2000)
- Pass Interceptions
: 10 Dave Whitsell (1967)
- Field Goals Made
: 31 Morten Andersen (1985) and John Carney (2002)
- Points
: 130 John Carney (2002)
- Total Touchdowns
: 18 Dalton Hilliard (1989)
- Punt Return Yards
: 625 Michael Lewis (2002)
- Kickoff Return Yards
: 1,807 Michael Lewis (2002)
- Longest Punt
: 81 Tom McNeill (1969)
- Points Scored, Season
: 463 (2008)
- Fewest Points Allowed
: 202 (1992)
- Offensive Yards Gained
: 6,571 (2008)
- Fewest Quarterback Sacks Allowed
: 13 (2008)
Saints career records
- Passing Attempts
: 3,335 Archie Manning (1971-75, 77-82)
- Passing Completions
: 1,849 Archie Manning (1971-75, 77-82)
- Passing Yards
: 21,734 Archie Manning (1971-75, 77-82), 19,156 Aaron Brooks (2000-05), 14,630 Bobby Hebert (1985-89, 91-92)
- Passing Touchdowns
: 120 Aaron Brooks (2000-2005), 115 Archie Manning (1971-75, 77-82), 88 Drew Brees (2006-08)
- Passing Interceptions
: 156 Archie Manning (1971-1982)
- Rushing Attempts
: 1,298 Deuce McAllister (2001-2008)
- Rushing Yards
: 6,096 Deuce McAllister (2001-2008), 4,267 George Rogers (1981-84), 4,164 Dalton Hilliard (1986-93)
- Rushing Touchdowns
: 49 Deuce McAllister (2001-2008), 39 Dalton Hilliard (1986-93), 28 Chuck Muncie (1976-80)
- Receiving Catches
: 532 Eric Martin (1985-1993), 523 Joe Horn (2000-06), 309 Danny Abramowicz (1967-73)
- Receiving Yards
: 7,844 Eric Martin (1985-1993), 7,622 Joe Horn (2000-06), 4,875 Danny Abramowicz (1967-73)
- Receiving Touchdowns
: 50 Joe Horn (2000-2006), 49 Eric Martin (1985-93), 37 Danny Abramowicz (1967-73)
- Quarterback Sacks
: 123 Rickey Jackson (1981-1993), 82.5 Wayne Martin (1989-99), 76.5 Pat Swilling (1986-92)
- Pass Interceptions
: 37 Dave Waymer (1980-1989), 36 Tommy Myers (1972-81), 28 Sammy Knight (1997-2002)
- Field Goals Made
: 302 Morten Andersen (1982-1994), 140 John Carney (2001-06), 123 Doug Brien (1995-2000)
- Extra Points Made
: 412 Morten Andersen (1982-1994)
- Points
: 1,318 Morten Andersen (1982-1994), 631 John Carney (2001-06), 514 Doug Brien (1995-2000)
- Total Touchdowns
: 55 Deuce McAllister (2001-2008), 53 Dalton Hilliard (1986-1993), 50 Joe Horn (2000-06)
- Punt Return Yards
: 1,482 Michael Lewis (2001-06), 1,060 Tyrone Hughes (1993-96), 887 Jeff Groth (1981-85)
- Kickoff Return Yards
: 5,903 Michael Lewis (2001-06), 5,717 Tyrone Hughes (1993-96), 2,836 Rich Mauti (1977-80, 82-83)
- Games
: 196 Morten Andersen (1982-1994)
Players of note
Current roster
|
Quarterbacks
- 9 Drew Brees
- 11 Mark Brunell
- 3 Joey Harrington
Running Backs
- 36 Darian Barnes FB
- 40 Mike Bell
- 44 Mike Karney FB
- 26 Deuce McAllister
- 23 Pierre Thomas KR
Wide Receivers
- 12 Marques Colston
- 19 Devery Henderson
- 17 Robert Meachem
- 16 Lance Moore PR
- 81 David Patten
Tight Ends
- 83 Billy Miller
- 86 Buck Ortega
- 88 Jeremy Shockey
|
| Offensive Linemen
- 70 Jammal Brown T
- 74 Jermon Bushrod T
- 73 Jahri Evans G
- 76 Jonathan Goodwin C
- 68 Matt Lehr C/G
- 67 Jamar Nesbit G
- 77 Carl Nicks
G
- 78 Jon Stinchcomb T
- 64 Zach Strief T
Defensive Linemen
- 97 Jeff Charleston DE
- 71 Kendrick Clancy DT
- 98 Sedrick Ellis
DT
- 60 Tearrius George DE
- 96 Antwan Lake DT
- 93 Bobby McCray DE
- 79 Rob Ninkovich DE
- 95 Josh Savage DE
- 91 Will Smith DE
- 99 Hollis Thomas DT
|
| Linebackers
- 56 Jo-Lonn Dunbar
OLB
- 54 Troy Evans OLB
- 55 Scott Fujita OLB
- 50 Marvin Mitchell ILB
- 58 Scott Shanle OLB
- 51 Jonathan Vilma ILB
Defensive Backs
- 29 Josh Bullocks FS
- 42 Jason David CB
- 20 Randall Gay CB
- 41 Roman Harper SS
- 21 Terrence Holt FS
- 35 Michael Lehan CB
- 39 Chris Reis SS
- 24 Leigh Torrence CB
- 28 Usama Young CB
Special Teams
- 5 Garrett Hartley
K
- 47 Kevin Houser LS
- 4 Glenn Pakulak P
|
| Reserve Lists
- 87 Adrian Arrington
WR (IR)
- 25 Reggie Bush RB (IR)
- 45 Jerametrius Butler CB (Did Not Report)
- 80 Mark Campbell TE (IR)
- 31 Aaron Glenn CB (IR)
- 1 Martín Gramática K (IR)
- 94 Charles Grant DE (IR)
- 43 Kevin Kaesviharn FS (IR)
- 34 Mike McKenzie CB (IR)
- 22 Tracy Porter
CB (IR)
- 90 DeMario Pressley
DT (IR)
- 60 James Reed DT (IR)
- 15 Courtney Roby WR (IR)
- 53 Mark Simoneau ILB (IR)
- 33 Olaniyi Sobomehin
FB (IR)
- 72 Montavious Stanley DT (IR)
- 27 Aaron Stecker RB (IR)
- 66 Brian Young DT (IR)
Practice Squad
- 38 Jermaine Allen RB Int'l
- 92 Remi Ayodele DT
- 32 Marquice Cole CB
- 75 Tim Duckworth G
- 84 Chris Francies WR
- 10 Skyler Green WR
- 30 Lynell Hamilton
RB
- 82 Kolo Kapanui
TE
- -- Marvin Philip C
Rookies in italics
updated 2008-12-16
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53 Active, 18 Inactive, 9 PS
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Pro Football Hall of Famers
- Doug Atkins DE 1967–1969
- Earl Campbell RB 1984–1985
- Jim Finks GM 1986–1993
- Hank Stram Coach 1976–1977
- Jim Taylor FB 1967
- Mike Ditka Coach 1997–1999 (inducted for playing career with Chicago Bears and other teams, 1961-72) [3]
- Tom Fears Coach 1967–1970 (inducted for playing career, 1948-1956)
It should be noted that with the exception of Jim Finks, whose tenure with the Saints contributed to his induction, there are no members of the HOF who are there for their time with the team. All are in for their work with previous teams.
Retired numbers
- 31 Jim Taylor (officially retired, but is assigned to active players)
- 81 Doug Atkins (officially retired, but is assigned to active players)
The number 8 has not been officially retired, but has not been issued to any Saints player since
Archie Manning was traded to the
Houston Oilers in September 1982.
New Orleans Saints Hall of Fame
The Saints Hall of Fame is a non-profit organization created by and for fans of the team to protect, preserve, promote and present the history of the franchise. The Saints Hall of Fame is located at 415 Williams Boulevard in the Rivertown section of Kenner. Open from 9 am-5 pm Tuesday through Saturday, the Hall of Fame features exhibits and memorabilia covering the entire history of the Saints from their formation through the current season. Due to building damage received during Hurricane Katrina the Hall of Fame is temporarily located at Gate B in the New Orleans Superdome and can be visited for free at every Saints home game. Fans can view videotapes on Saints history and the Saints Hall of Famers as well participate in interactive exhibits throughout the Hall. The facility, which originally opened on July 16, 1988, was expanded to twice its' original size in January 2004. Busts and paintings of each of the inductees along with their career highlights are one of the focal points of the museum, which is dedicated to preserving the history of the Saints franchise. New Orleans and Green Bay are the only two NFL franchises with a team Hall of Fame facility.
[4]
- 1988 QB Archie Manning, WR Danny Abramowicz
- 1989 S Tommy Myers, K Tom Dempsey
- 1990 QB Billy Kilmer
- 1991 NT Derland Moore, RB Tony Galbreath
- 1992 RB George Rogers, G Jake Kupp, C John Hill
- 1993 LB Joe Federspiel
- 1994 GM Jim Finks, TE Henry Childs
- 1995 DE Bob Pollard, DE Doug Atkins
- 1996 CB Dave Whitsell, DB Dave Waymer
- 1997 LB Rickey Jackson, T Stan Brock
- 1998 RB Dalton Hilliard, LB Sam Mills
- 1999 QB Bobby Hebert, WR Eric Martin
- 2000 LB Vaughan Johnson, LB Pat Swilling
- 2001 TE Hoby Brenner, DE Jim Wilks
- 2002 Coach Jim Mora, DE Frank Warren
- 2003 DE Wayne Martin, G/T Jim Dombrowski
- 2004 RB Rueben Mayes, Assistant Coach Steve Sidwell
- 2005-2006 C Joel Hilgenberg (2005 induction ceremonies postponed to October 27, 2006 due to Hurricane Katrina)
- 2007 DE Joe Johnson
- 2008 OT Willie Roaf
Joe Gemelli "Fleur-De-Lis" Award
(Awarded yearly to a person who has contributed to the betterment of the New Orleans Saints organization.
[
]- 1989: Al Hirt
- 1990: Joe Gemelli
- 1991: Dave Dixon
- 1992: Charlie Kertz
- 1993: Wayne Mack
- 1994: Erby Aucoin
- 1995: Aaron Broussard
- 1996: Marie Knutson
- 1997: Angela Hill
- 1998: Joe Impastato
- 1999: Frank Wilson
- 2000: Bob Remy
- 2001: Peter "Champ" Clark
- 2002: Dean Kleinschmidt
- 2003: Jim Fast
- 2004: Bob Roesler
- 2005-06: Bernard "Buddy" Diliberto (2005 induction ceremonies postponed to October 27, 2006 due to Hurricane Katrina)*
Notable coaches
Current staff
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- Owner - Tom Benson
- Owner/Executive Vice President - Rita Benson LeBlanc
- Executive Vice President/General Manager - Mickey Loomis
- Director of Football Administration - Khai Harley
- Director of Pro Scouting - Ryan Pace
- Director of College Scouting - Rick Reiprish
Head Coaches
- Head Coach - Sean Payton
- Assistant Head Coach/Linebackers - Joe Vitt
Offensive Coaches
- Offensive Coordinator/Offensive Line - Doug Marrone
- Quarterbacks/Passing Game - Pete Carmichael, Jr.
- Running Backs - Aaron Kromer
- Wide Receivers - Curtis Johnson
- Tight Ends - Terry Malone
- Offensive Assistant - Joe Lombardi
- Offensive Assistant/Player Programs Assistant - Carter Sheridan
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Defensive Coaches
- Defensive Coordinator - Gary Gibbs
- Defensive Line - Ed Orgeron
- Assistant Defensive Line - Travis Jones
- Secondary - Dennis Allen
- Assistant Secondary - Tony Oden
Special Teams Coaches
- Special Teams Coordinator - Greg McMahon
- Assistant Special Teams - Mike Mallory
Strength and Conditioning
- Head Strength and Conditioning - Dan Dalrymple
- Assistant Strength and Conditioning - Adam Bailey
Coaching Assistants
- Joe Alley, Mike Cerullo, Adam Zimmer
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Radio and television
The Saints' flagship station is WWL 870AM (FM Simulcast on WWL 105.3FM), one of the oldest radio stations in the city of New Orleans and one of the nation's most powerful as a clear-channel station with 50,000 watts of power. [5] Jim Henderson and Hokie Gajan form the broadcast team. Most preseason games are televised on Cox Sports Television and WVUE-TV. Tim Brando and Solomon Wilcots call the preseason action.
References
- Louisiana Superdome history site (accessed 2009 April 21) From 1967 to 1974 inclusive the Saints played at Tulane Saints.
- saintsdoggle: UPDATE: Saints sell out suites for 2007 season; Season ticket wait list 25,000 deep; San Antonio finally giving up?
- Pro Football Hall of Fame page for Mike Ditka.
- New Orleans Saints - Saints Hall of Fame Info
- Saints Radio Network Stations